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1976 DIGILAW 271 (SC)

Performing Right Society LTD. v. Commissioner Of Income Tax

1976-08-10

A.C.GUPTA, JASWANT SINGH

body1976
JUDGMENT A. C. GUPTA, J. :— The first appellant, Performing Right Society Limited. (hereinafter called the Society) is a company incorporated under the (English) Companies Acts, 1908 and 1913, having its registered office at Copyright House, 33, Margaret Street, Cavendish Square, London - a company limited by guarantee and having no share capital. The Society is an association of composers, authors and publishers of copyright musical works established to grant permission for the performing right in such works. Performing right means the right of performing in public, broadcasting and causing to be transmitted to subscribers to a diffusion service, in all parts of the world. The members of the Society are required to assign to the Society the performing right in their works, and the Society exercises and enforces on their behalf all rights and remedies in respect of any exploitation of such works. The Society collects royalties for the issue of licences granting such permission and distributes the royalties to the members of the Society, namely, the composers, authors, music publishers and other persons having an interest in the copyright in proportion to the extent to which a members work is publicly performed or broadcast after a pro-rate deduction of the expenses. Article 43 of the Articles of Association of the Society provides that the business and operations of the Society shall be conducted and managed by a General Council, and Article 48 authorises the General Council to apply the receipts also for certain other purposes. Article 48 reads as follows : "48. The General Council may, before making any distribution among the Members : (a) Apply out of the receipts such sums as it thinks proper or has agreed to contribute as :- (i) Gratuities, donations, pensions and emoluments to any Member or ex-Member of the Society or any person at any time in the employment of the Society, or engaged in any business acquired by the Society, and the wives, widows, families and dependants of any such person; (ii) Contributions to any benevolent, pension or similar fund which may be established for the benefit of Members, ex-Members or employees of the Society or their wives, widows, families or dependants. (b) Set aside out of the receipts such sums as it thinks proper as subscriptions, donations, loans, gifts or other payments for any of the purposes for which power is given by paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of Clause 3 (f) of the Memorandum of Association, provided that without the assent of the Society in General Meeting the aggregate of all such payments shall not in any one year exceed the sum of one thousand pounds and four thousand pounds under the provisions of those paragraphs respectively, (c) Set aside out of the receipts such sums as it thinks proper as a reserve fund to meet contingencies, or for future distribution, or for repairing, improving and maintaining any of the property or premises of the Society, and for such other purposes as the General Council shall in its absolute discretion think necessary or conducive to the interests of the Society, and may invest for the several sums so set aside in such investments as it may think fit, and from time to time deal with or vary, such investments and dispose of all or any part thereof for the benefit of the Society, and may divide the reserve fund into such special funds as it thinks fit, and employ the reserve fund or any part thereof for the general purposes of the Society, and that without being bound to keep the same separate from the other assets." 2. On December 13, 1953 the Society entered into an agreement with the President of India owning and controlling broadcasting stations in India and organizing and conducting the same under the name of All India Radio (hereinafter referred to as the licensee) whereby the Society granted to the licensee the authority, (a) to broadcast from the licensees sound broadcasting stations in India all musical works included in the repertoire of the Society, and (b) to utilize, solely, for the purpose of sound broadcasting as aforesaid, any originating performance of the such musical works, irrespective of the source of such performance and the means whereby the such performance is conveyed to the point of broadcast transmission from the licensees stations. The agreement was executed in England. It may be stated here that previous to this agreement the parties had entered into a similar agreement in the year 1940. The agreement was executed in England. It may be stated here that previous to this agreement the parties had entered into a similar agreement in the year 1940. The agreement of 1953 states that the licence granted thereby "shall be deemed to have come into force on April 1, 1949 and shall continue from year to year until determined by either party giving to the other three calendar months notice in writing to expire on March 31 in any year". The agreement provides that the licensee shall send to the Society at its registered office in London, the lists of all musical works broadcast in each week during the term of the licence from each of the licensees main stations (Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta and Madras) and the external services, and requires the licensee to furnish a return after the first day of April every year during the period of licence, stating the aggregate number of hours occupied during the period ended on the previous 31st March in broadcasting Western music from each of the licensees main and external Service Stations. The agreement further provides that for the rights granted, the licensee will pay to the Society annually a sum calculated at the rate of £ 2 (Two pounds) per hour of broadcasting Western music from each of the licensees main and external service Stations and that such annual payments must be made to the Society in London. 3. The second appellant, M/s. Natsin India Private Limited is a private limited company incorporated under the (Indian) Companies Act having its office at 26, Chowringhee Road, Calcutta. The second appellant was appointed by the Society to be its lawful attorney in Indiaby virtue of a power of attorney granted by the Society to the second appellant in July, 1967. As agent in India for the Society, the second appellant realises on its behalf royalties from cinema houses and other sources where music over which the Society has copyright is played in this country and has, inter alia, the power to commence and prosecute suits and other proceedings, engage lawyers, and sign plaints, petitions etc. As agent in India for the Society, the second appellant realises on its behalf royalties from cinema houses and other sources where music over which the Society has copyright is played in this country and has, inter alia, the power to commence and prosecute suits and other proceedings, engage lawyers, and sign plaints, petitions etc. Prior to July, 1967 the Society, a non-resident company, used to file its returns of income before the Income-tax Officer, Madras, though its former agent in India, M/s. Vernon and Company of Madras, The royalties or fees realised from the licensee were not included in its returns for the assessment years 1947-48 to 1950-51. Later, the Income-tax Officer, Madras, issued notices under Section 34 (1) of the Income-tax Act, 1922 and assessed the said income after deducting the proportionate administrative expenses. The appeals taken by Vernon and Company against the supplementary assessment orders for the aforesaid years were dismissed by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, Madras. The matter rested there and the Society had been paying tax on its income in India including the income from royalties received from the licensee without objection until the assessment year 1967-68 for which the accounting year ended December 31, 1966. In the said assessment year also the Income-tax Officer, Companies Circle L (II), Madras, by his order dated October 23, 1968, assessed the total income of the Society treating the income arising out of the agreement with the licensee as chargeable as was being done all these years. Against this order of assessment, the Society through the second appellant made a revisional application under Section 264 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as the Act) to the Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal, where the Societys income-tax file had been transferred in the meantime. The Additional Commissioner of Income-tax who dealt with the application dismisse the same by his ordered datedJuly 18, 1970. The Society then moved a writ petition before the Calcutta High Court challenging the order of the Additional Commissioner of Income-tax. A rule nisi was issued on the petition by a learned Judge of the High Court but ultimately the rule was discharged and the petition was dismissed. On appeal by the Society, a Division Bench of the High Court affirmed the view taken by the learned single judge and dismissed the appeal on September 24, 1973. A rule nisi was issued on the petition by a learned Judge of the High Court but ultimately the rule was discharged and the petition was dismissed. On appeal by the Society, a Division Bench of the High Court affirmed the view taken by the learned single judge and dismissed the appeal on September 24, 1973. In this appeal by special leave the appellants question the correctness of that decision and challenge the order of assessment on two grounds : (1) the agreement between the Society and the Licensee having been executed in England and the royalties being also payable in England, the income out of this agreement is not liable to be taxed India; (2) the Society being under an obligation to distribute the income to its members, the royalties realised are not really the income of the Society. The first point seems to be covered by the provisions of Section 5 (2) (b) of the Act. Section 5 (2) reads as follows : "5. Scope of total income : (1) x x x (2) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the total income of any previous year of a person who is a non-resident includes all income from whatever source derived which - (a) is reeived or is deemed to be received in India in such year by or on behalf of such person; or (b) accrues or arises or is deemed to accrue or arise to him in India during such year. Explanation 1. - Income accruing or arising outside India shall not be deemed to be received in India within the meaning of this section by reason only of the fact that it is taken into account in a balance sheet prepared in India. Explanation 2. - For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that income which has been included in the total income of a person on the basis that it has accrued or arisen or is deemed to have accrued or arisen to him shall not again be so included on the basis that it is received or deemed to be received by him in India." The Society is a non-resident company, and though it receives the income out of the agreement executed not in India but in England, the income undoubtedly accrues or arises in India. On behalf of the appellants it was contended that the source of income was really the agreement which was entered into in England. We do not think that the question as to the source of the income is relevant because sub-section (2) of Section 5 provides that all income "from whatever source derived" is to be included in the total income of the non-resident assessee if the income accrues or arises in India during the relevant year. Reference was also made to Section 9 of the Act which enumerates the incomes that shall be "deemed to accrue or arise in India" though actually accruing elsewhere, to establish that the income in question could not be deemed to accrue or arise in India. But the income in this case has in fact accrued in India and no question arises whether it should be "deemed" to accrue or arise in India. Whether a certain income accrued or arose in India within the meaning of Section 5 (2) is a question of fact "which should be looked at and decided in the light of commonsense and plain thinking" as the Calcutta High Court considering a similar question under Section 4 (1) of the Income-tax Act, 1922 observed.* In the case before us the High Court and the income-tax authorities considered it a hard matter of fact that the income derived from broadcast of copyright music from the stations of All India Radio arose in India. In our opinion this was the correct view to take and we find no reason to differ from it. * In the matter of V. G. Every, (1937) 5 ITR 216 (Cal) (Constello, J.). 4. The next question is whether the income from the royalties was the Societys own income. It was contended on the authority of Bejoy Singh Dudhuria v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bengal, 1 ITR 135 that the obligation to disburse the sum among its members diverted the income from the Society to the members, and it could not be called the income of the Society. It was contended on the authority of Bejoy Singh Dudhuria v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bengal, 1 ITR 135 that the obligation to disburse the sum among its members diverted the income from the Society to the members, and it could not be called the income of the Society. In Bejoy Singh Dudhurias case there was a decree of the Court charging the appellants whole resources with a specific payment to his step mother; the Privy Council held that the decree had to that extent diverted his income from him and directed it to his step mother, and that to that extent what he received for her was not his income. But where payments are made by the assessee after he has received the income as his, the position is different. This was pointed out by the Judicial Committee in a later case, P. C. Mullick v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bengal, 6 ITR 206 where the executors in accordance with the directions in the will had paid Rs. 5,537/- to the person who performed the testators addya Sradh, and another sum of Rs. 1,25,000/- for probate duty out of the income of the estate. It was held that this was not a case in which a portion of the income was by an overriding title diverted from the person who would otherwise have received it as in Bejoy Singh Dudhurias case but it was simply a case in which the executors having received the whole income of the estate apply a portion in a particular way pursuant to the directions of their testator, in whose shoes they stand". The true test for the application of the rule of diversion of income by an overriding title has been explained by this Court in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City v. Sitaldas Tirathdas, 41 ITR 367 at pp. 374-375. "In our opinion, the true test is whether the amount sought to be deducted, in truth, never reached the assessee as his income. Obligations, no doubt, there are in every case, but it is the nature of the obligation which is the decisive fact. There is a difference between an amount which a person is obliged to apply out of his income and an amount which by the nature of the obligation cannot be said to be a part of the income of the assessee. There is a difference between an amount which a person is obliged to apply out of his income and an amount which by the nature of the obligation cannot be said to be a part of the income of the assessee. Where by the obligation income is diverted before it reaches the assessee, it is deductible; but where the income is required to be applied to discharge an obligation after such income reaches the assessee, the same consequence, in law, does not follow. It is the first kind of payment which can truly be excused and not the second. The second payment is merely an obligation to pay another a portion of ones own income, which has been received and is since applied. The first is a case in which the income never reaches the assessee, who even if he were to collect it, does so, not as part of his income, but for and on behalf of the person to whom it is payable." 5. On the facts of the present case it is clear that the royalties payable by the licensee under the agreement are realised by the Society as its income. Article48 of the Societys Articles of Association puts the matter beyond doubt. Out of the receipts are deducted the expenses and also such other sums as in the discretion of the General Council should be set aside for the purposes mentioned in Article 48. This is a case where the assessee having received the income applies it in a particular way; it is not a case of diversion of income by an overriding charge. 6. The appeal is accordingly dismissed. There will be no order as to costs. Appeal dismissed. For Citation : AIR 1976 SC 1973